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Education Principles, Quality Assurance & Staff development ......12 Curriculum Design 15 Quality...
Transcript of Education Principles, Quality Assurance & Staff development ......12 Curriculum Design 15 Quality...
Education Principles,
Quality Assurance
& Staff development Policy
2020-21
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CONTENTS
Page
Contents
2 TCAT mission and values
3 Operating principles: The 3 Cs
4 2020 – 21 Strategic objectives
6 Delivering against strategic objectives
8 Evidence informed practice
9 The EEF logic model
10 A common approach to action planning
11 The principles of instruction
12 Curriculum Design
15 Quality assurance
18 Peer review process
25 Curriculum review
35 Education Connect and staff development
37 Professional networks
38 COVID-19 response
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The Challenge Academy Trust (TCAT) Mission and Values
Our mission statement:
‘To serve, challenge and empower the educational community.’
All our work is underpinned by a set of core values, they are:
• Collaboration & interdependence
• Challenge & service
• Sustainability & well-being
• Celebrating difference
• Educational Excellence
• Inclusivity & social justice
Our TCAT values inform everything we do as a trust and all of our services
and working practices are designed around these concepts.
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Operating Principles: THE 3 Cs
We operate around 3 core principles of collaboration, challenge and continuous professional
development or our 3 Cs. These principles apply across the work of our Education
Directorate and our Business Support Team.
• Continuous professional development is at the heart of our practice and we
have and extensive programme of professional development which ranges from
Initial Teacher Training right up to Headship qualifications. Our training offer is a
combination of externally accredited qualifications, external providers and internal
training provided by colleagues from across the organisation. We invest in our
staff to ensure they feel valued, develop as practitioners and provide the
best outcomes for our young people.
• Collaboration goes much further than simply working together, we aim to create
strength through interdependence and collective accountability in our working
practices. We do not mandate alignment but aim for harmonisation through shared
values and goals. Much of this is achieved via our extensive professional hub
network.
• Challenge & support in equal measure is crucial to our success. We have a
comprehensive programme of quality assurance which provides our academies with
a ‘mirror on themselves’ and provides rigorous scrutiny for the trust board. However,
this is does not happen in isolation and is allied with a detailed professional
development programme, access to a huge range of expertise and experience and
the support necessary to improve. This is central to our ethos of earned autonomy.
Collaboration
Continuous Professional
Development
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2020 -21 Strategic Objectives
Our key strategic objectives are focused around three key dimensions:
• pupils/students
• people
• performance
Our Strategic Action Plan is reviewed by trustees on a regular basis and we set challenging
targets focused around each of these dimensions which involve a focus upon pupil
outcomes, engagement of vulnerable young people, financial health & sustainability,
professional development, well-being and safeguarding amongst other things.
1. Pupils / students:
1.1. Curriculum implementation - Implement effective curriculum delivery and
continuity in context of Covid-19 measures
1.2. Curriculum impact - Ensure assessment of curriculum impact is meaningful & fit
for purpose in light of Covid-19 measures
1.3. Inclusivity - Ensure full access to the wider curriculum & develop capacity and
expertise in relation to inclusive practice
1.4. Disadvantaged and vulnerable - Mitigate the impact of Covid-19 measures upon
progress of vulnerable & disadvantaged groups
1.5. Transition - Ensure smooth and effective transition at each key stage and on to
careers, training and further education
2. People:
2.1 Networks and communication - Ensure effective professional networks are in
place with a clear system of communication & reporting
2.2 Professional development - Design & implement a highly effective and
economically sustainable CPD programme
2.3 Diversity and faith - Ensure policies and practice actively promote diversity and
social equality
2.4 HR support and well-being - Deliver an effective in-house HR system to support
all academies with the management of the workforce & promote staff well-being in a
meaningful way
2.5 Safeguarding - Ensure safe & compliant management of the workforce, trustees
and governors
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3. Performance:
3.1 Academy standards - Ensure sufficient support and challenge is in place to enable
academies to achieve in line with targets
3.2 VFM, financial stability and growth - Provide sufficient challenge & support to
enable academies to achieve balanced budgets for 20-21
3.3 Sustainability - Create a 5-10 year sustainability strategy to conserve/sweat
assets, reduce waste and to utilise sustainable energy
3.4 Buildings and resources - Coordinate capital income to ensure best value for
money and safe working environments
3.5 Technology and communications - Design and implement a roadmap to achieve
delivery of a central IT service
We are a high performing, successful trust but we are always striving to reflect and improve.
In order to do this we have established a range of approaches that lead out on the above
objectives through educational and business strands across the trust. These include hubs
whose remit it is to focus upon delivering strategic objectives, sharing of good practice and
expertise across the trust as well as, where appropriate, delivering synergy in practice to
maximise impact. All hubs follow our commitment in using proven research based around
the EEF implementation model.
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Delivering against strategic objectives
The hubs are the main conduit to deliver the trust’s strategic objectives. Objectives are
identified against working groups to support in the delivery alongside the hubs.
ObjectivesWorking
groupRelevant
hubs
• Delivering objectives through:
• Working group: OPCAT
• Hubs: Business support, IT, Finance
Objective summary:
Networks & comms
CPD
Diveristy (staff)
HR support & well-being
Safeguarding (organisational)
Financial stability
Sustainability
Building & resources
Tech & comms
• Delivering objectives through:
• Working group: CETObjective summary:
Organisation leadership
• Delivering objectives through:
• Working group: CETObjective summary:
Organisation leadership
• Delivering objectives through:
• Working group: Secondary/P16 heads & Primary heads
• Hubs: SET & PET
Objective summary:
Secondary oversight
Primary oversight
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The trust wide strategic action plan incorporates all the relevant objectives against key
performance indicators and success criterion. The identified hubs and working parties
populate their focused objectives into the priority action plan (PAP).
At academy level, school priorities are aligned under the objectives of pupils/students,
people and performance through populating a scorecard and completing a priority action
plan (PAP). The holistic scorecard combines education and business along with Ofsted
criterion.
The PAP follows the EEF logic model approach of explore, prepare, deliver and sustain.
•Delivering objectives through:
•Working group: Primary heads, CAO group, Secondary currculum group & secondary assessment group
•Hubs: T&L, EBacc & Comp Sci, Pri Eng/Ma/Sci, EYFS, Literacy
Objective summary:
Curriculum continuity
Curriculum impact
CPD (link)
•Delivering objectives through:
•Working group: Primary heads, secondary pastoral group
•Hubs: PD, Student experience, safeguarding, transition, behaviour & attendance, sports, careers & aspirations, SEND
Objective summary:
Inclusivity
Disadvantaged & vulnerables
Transition
Well-being
Diversity & faith (students)
PD & student experience
Safeguarding (students)
•Delivering objectives through:
•Working group: Primary & Secondary Executive Principals
Objective summary:
Standards
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Evidence Informed Practice
A commitment to disciplined research & action
Academies within TCAT will commit to an approach to teaching and learning and educational
practice which is based upon evidence-informed practice and credible research. This
approach is supported by our partnership with The University of Oxford and Oxnet@TCAT
has been established to facilitate these links.
Individual staff, departments, collaborative hubs and academies will commit to the principles
of evidence-informed improvement as set out by the Education Endowment Foundation in
Putting Evidence to Work: A Academy’s Guide to Implementation which focus around:
1. Identifying key priorities & clear success criteria
2. Evaluating different strategies based on evidence
3. Creating the right conditions for successful change
4. Evaluating impact at regular milestones
5. Embedding change
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The EEF logic model for effective implementation
Explore
Define the problem using analysis and
consider appropriate inputs, research,
evidence etc.
Prepare
Create a clear implementation plan. Judge
academy readiness. Prepare the team etc.
Consider success/milestones.
Deliver
Communicate the plan, train staff, launch.
Pilot if necessary.
Monitor & evaluate at regular intervals & be
ready to adapt.
Short term outcomes
Identify what should happen as a
consequence of the plan.
Celebrate quick wins
Sustain
Plan to scale up. Consider long term
resources and staff/training implications.
Continually acknowledge, support and
reward good implementation strategies.
Long term outcomes
Identify what should happen as a
consequence of the plan.
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A common approach to action planning
Target Action Date Who Review
1. 1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
2. 1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
3. 1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
4. 1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
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The Principles of Instruction
The work of Barak Rosenshine and the ten principles of instruction and suggested classroom
practices is a useful tool to support with teaching and learning and educational practice.
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Curriculum Design
TCAT Principles of Curriculum design and delivery
TCAT academies will design and deliver curricular based upon the principles set out in the
OECD Learning Framework 2030. We will help every young person develop as a whole
person, fulfil his/her potential and contribute towards a future built upon the social and
economic well-being of the individual, the local community and the wider world.
Academies within TCAT will provide a broad and balanced curriculum which prepares young
people for the social, economic and environmental challenges of modern living. We will
encourage our young people to value individual and collective well-being, prosperity and
sustainability.
We will promote the knowledge, skills, attitudes, beliefs and values necessary to support
future ready young people who are able to exercise ‘learner agency’ and to take
responsibility for their own education and to participate positively in the world. We will do
this by providing a solid foundation of literacy, numeracy, general knowledge,
digital/technological competence, physical health & well-being and enable them to mobilise
disciplinary and inter-disciplinary knowledge, cognitive and social skills and attitudes and
values to meet complex demands.
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We will use The Learning Compass 2030 as a guiding influence to define the knowledge,
skills, attitudes and values that learners need to fulfil their potential and contribute to the
well-being of their communities and the planet.
OECD Learning Compass
We will operate around the following OECD design principles:
• Student agency. The curriculum should be designed around students to motivate
them and recognise their prior knowledge, skills, attitudes and values.
• Rigour. Topics should be challenging and enable deep thinking and reflection.
• Focus. A relatively small number of topics should be introduced in each grade to
ensure the depth and quality of students’ learning. Topics may overlap in order to
reinforce key concepts.
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• Coherence. Topics should be sequenced to reflect the logic of the academic
discipline or disciplines on which they draw, enabling progression from basic to more
advanced concepts through stages and age levels.
• Alignment. The curriculum should be well-aligned with teaching and assessment
practices. While the technologies to assess many of the desired outcomes do not yet
exist, different assessment practices might be needed for different purposes. New
assessment methods should be developed that value student outcomes and actions
that cannot always be measured.
• Transferability. Higher priority should be given to knowledge, skills, attitudes and
values that can be learned in one context and transferred to others.
• Choice. Students should be offered a diverse range of topic and project options, and
the opportunity to suggest their own topics and projects, with the support to make
well-informed choices.
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Quality Assurance
There is an annual cycle of quality assurance for all academies within TCAT, this is coordinated by an
Executive Principal, the TCAT Operations Leads and the Director of Finance. The trust works upon the
principle of earned autonomy which is structured around the management of risk. Where risks are
identified, academies may seek central support or the trust may decide to intervene; this approach
relates to educational outcomes, safeguarding, governance, business and financial management and
all relevant protocols and procedures.
Following the results of terminal examinations and end of year data returns, each academy will
complete a scorecard. This scorecard contains data around the majority of key performance indicators
which are RAG rated in relation to national averages or other benchmarks. The scorecard also contains
a self-evaluation section which should be supported by clear evidence and a set of key performance
indicators for the year ahead. Each academy will suggest ambitious but achievable targets for the year
ahead which will be benchmarked against FFT Aspire data and quality assured by an Executive
Principal, TCAT operations Lead or Director of Finance.
Within meetings held early in the autumn term, trust colleagues will work with academies to identify
any specific central support or resources which can be provided by TCAT to support the achievement
of KPIs or benchmarks. For academies in challenging circumstances, this will be an expectation. This
may include ongoing leadership support, curriculum reviews, input from lead practitioners or SLEs,
financial support or guidance or training for staff and governors.
All academies will be subject to an annual peer review to challenge/validate self-assessment
judgements, a termly meeting with an Executive Principal, pupil premium and SEND reviews and
ongoing scrutiny around finance, governance, safeguarding, health & safety and anything else causing
any concern.
The cycle of quality assurance around academy performance:
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The cycle of challenge / support for academy performance
September
•Submit data
•Exec Principal to meet with LPs to analyse subject perfromance & plan for year ahead
•Schools to complete & submit scorecard, SEF & PAP by Oct half term
•Heads and RALs to meet with Executive principal to dsicuss judgements & evidence & to agree targets for the year ahead
•Consider trust support required within RASP
October-December
•Exec Principal to arrange & schedule peer reviews (proportionate to need)
•Finalise scorecard, Sef, PAP & Agree RAS
•Exec Principal to coordinate & deploy TCAT resources where appropriate
•Trust meetings:Exec principals to report to Q&S committee
•Peer reviews to take place as arranged
•Exec Principal leadership support visits to take place as arranged
January-March
•AUTUMN REVIEW CYCLE
•Submit autumn data and review of KPIs and SEF/PAP early January
•Exec Principal & LPs to review autumn data
•Heads to meet with Exec Principal to review scorcard, SEF & PAP/RASP-monitor impact
•Review RASP and deployment/central resource
•Trust meetings: Exec Principal to report to Q&S and trust board
•Peer reviews continue
March-May
•SPRING REVIEW CYCLE
•Submit Spring data and review of KPIs and SEF/PAP late April
•Heads to meet with Exec Principal to review scorcard, SEF & PAP/RASP-monitor impact
•Review RASP & deployment/central resource
•Exec Principal to meet LPs for Spring review
March-May
•SUMMER REVIEW CYCLE
•Exec Principal to monitor impact against PAP & RASP & review intervention in accordance with need
•Review and update KPIs, SEF/PAP and submit if change required in time for Q&S meeting
•Heads to meet Exec Principal to review scorecard, SEF & PAP/RASP-monitor impact
•Review RASP & deployment/central resource
•Exec Principal to meet LPs for Summer review
•Trust meetings: Exec Principal to report to Q&S on and trust board
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Quality Assurance Timeline
Quality assurance across key areas are carefully planned for and audited. The TCAT
calendar includes details of all events linked to the identified areas below.
FINANCE & HR QUALITY OF EDUCATION
SAFEGUARDING GOVERNANCE KEY GROUPS
Key Policies
Financial Handbook Appraisal Capability Staff Expenses Competitive Tendering Data Protection Investment Premises Management Risk Assessment
EYFS policies & procedures Equality information & objectives Curriculum Statement & Vision Curriculum policies
CSR CP Policy & Procedures Whistle Blowing Safer Recruitment Behaviour Principles Written Statement Behaviour Policy Anti-Bullying Attendance
Admissions Accessibility (3yrs) Charging & Remission First Aid Freedom of Information Governors Code of Conduct Health & Safety Provider Assessment Sex Education Staff Code of Conduct Supporting Pupils with Medical Needs Teacher’s Pay Statement of procedures for dealing with allegations of abuse against staff
Special Educational Needs Information Report SEN policy
Annual event
• Financial audit • GDPR audit • Staff well-being
survey
• Peer Reviews, inc. lit, transition, outcomes, curriculum provision, leadership, teaching & PDBW
• Agreed common assessment points, data submission & analysis (termly)
• DSL, Dep DSL training
• Staff training • Hays training • Safeguarding Trust
Audit, external QA, including off-rolling)
• Safeguarding Academy Audit, Section 175 LA
• Anti-bullying reviews (PDBW group)
• Governance review (external)
• Governor conference
• X3 termly training (TCAT led)
• Designated Provision review (reports to Dir of QS & QS com)
• PP review
• PP impact report & outcomes
• SEND audit (LA) (reports to Dir of QS & QS Com)
• Appraisal
Monthly event
• Monthly accounts • Monthly academy
meeting • Follow-up meeting
with CEO / FD (linked to Risk)
• Attendance at CET meetings
• Fortnightly OPCAT
Half Termly event
• Business support meetings (3/4 per term)
• Challenge partner meetings (3/4 per term)
• Half termly hub meeting
• Half termly hub update
• Committee Trust meetings
• LGB meetings
• Half termly hub report and meetings
Termly event
• Scorecard meetings & update
• Scorecard meetings & update
• Termly report to Trustees
• Scorecard meetings & update
• Scorecard meetings & update
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Peer Review Process
Aims and objectives The aims of the TCAT peer review process are:
• to provide professional challenge to senior leaders around the judgements they have made within the self-evaluation section of the TCAT scorecard
• to evaluate progress made against the academy’s priority action plan • to provide the trust with an independent evaluation of academy effectiveness
The peer review team will review the strength and integrity of both the first hand and reported evidence provided by each academy using the methodology set out below. The report will provide a set of evaluative conclusions and considerations around key judgements. These conclusions will be based upon the evidence seen and provided throughout the review day and will be drawn from the grade criteria outlined in the Ofsted Academy Inspection Handbook (May 2019). The report will be distributed to governors and trustees as an objective review of the academy’s effectiveness. It should, however, be understood that this is only a snapshot of the academy’s performance and should not be seen as a definitive or comprehensive assessment of the academy’s performance. The aim of the process is to provide a critical framework to promote further thinking and professional dialogue around academy improvement within each institution and to enable the central executive team and the trust board to make judgements regarding any additional intervention required. Methodology The review will take place annually in each academy and will use a similar methodology to that set out in the Ofsted Academy Inspection handbook (May 2019) and within the TCAT curriculum review tool. Senior leaders in academies should have used the guidance and grade descriptors within this handbook to form their own ‘best fit’ judgements about the academy within the SEF. They should also identify the key pieces of evidence they have used to come to these conclusions within the self-evaluation section of the scorecard. The review team will consider the strength and veracity of this evidence to form their own conclusions about the academy. They will also use first-hand evidence as described in the Ofsted handbook (see below extract). Individual reviewers will be given responsibility for discrete Ofsted strands such as Quality of education and Leadership, TCAT will always endeavour to select reviewers with adequate experience of the strand they have responsibility for. Although meetings with leaders are important, inspectors’ first priority during inspections is to collect first-hand evidence.
85. Inspectors will observe lessons; scrutinise pupils’ work; talk to pupils about their work, gauging both their understanding and their engagement in learning; and gather pupils’ perceptions of the typical quality of education and other aspects of life at the academy in a range of subjects.
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86. Inspectors will evaluate evidence of the impact of the curriculum, including on the most disadvantaged pupils. This includes pupils with SEND. It also includes pupils who meet the criteria for the academy to receive pupil premium funding: pupils claiming free academy meals at any point in the last six years, looked after children (children in local authority care) and/or children who left care through adoption or another formal route.51 In addition, it includes children in need of help and protection, receiving statutory local authority support from a social worker. Inspectors will give specific attention to the acquisition of knowledge and skills in lessons and on-site separate provision and evidence of learning in off-site alternative provision.
87. Other evidence gathered by inspectors will include: discussions with pupils and staff; listening to pupils read; and looking at examples of pupils’ work for evidence of progress in knowledge, understanding and skills towards defined endpoints. Inspectors will also scrutinise the academy’s records and documentation relating, for example, to the welfare and safety of pupils in alternative provision. The review team may request any of the following information be provided prior to or on the day of review.
• the academy timetable, current staff list (indicating NQTs) and times for the academy day
• any information about previously planned interruptions to normal academy routines during the inspection
• records and analysis of exclusions, pupils taken off roll, incidents of poor behaviour and any use of internal isolation
• the single central record for the academy • records and analysis of sexual harassment or sexual violence • records and analysis of bullying, discriminatory and prejudiced behaviour, either
directly or indirectly, including racist, sexist, disability and homophobic/biphobic/transphobic bullying, use of derogatory language and racist incidents
• a list of referrals made to the designated person for safeguarding in the academy and those who were subsequently referred to the local authority, along with brief details of the resolution
• a list of all pupils who have open cases with children’s services/social care and for whom there is a multi-agency plan
• up-to-date attendance analysis for all groups of pupils • documented evidence of the work of those responsible for governance and their
priorities, including any written scheme of delegation for an academy in a MAT • a summary of any academy self-evaluation or equivalent
• the current academy improvement plan or equivalent, including any planning that sets out the longer-term vision for the academy, such as the academy or the trust’s strategy
• any reports from external evaluation of the academy • maps and other practical information
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Making judgements The review team will evaluate the evidence provided, observe practice on the ground, meet with relevant leaders and staff and talk to students before reaching conclusions about the judgements senior leaders have made about the academy. The review team will offer evaluative statements regarding the ‘best fit’ judgement for the academy based on the grades and grade criteria set out in the Ofsted handbook. Statements will not be definitive due to the nature of the review but instead will offer professional opinion such as: Based on the firsthand evidence and meetings with senior leaders, there seems to be sufficient evidence to justify a good judgement for quality of education. Based on the firsthand evidence and meetings with senior leaders it would seems that a good judgement for quality of education is ambitious. Reviewers will not always be trained inspectors or may not have sufficient time/evidence to make conclusive judgements; however all reviewers should have sufficient experience and be able to seek sufficient evidence to make well-informed professional judgements. Any significant variance between the judgements made by senior leaders and reviewers will be discussed by the headteacher and the lead reviewer before the report is written. The lead reviewer will be ultimately responsible for the content of the report. The report
The report will consist of an overall evaluation of strengths and areas for
development/consideration and will make an evaluative statement regarding the overall
effectiveness of the academy.
The report will contain a section on each of the key Ofsted strands which will consist of an
overall evaluation of the academy’s judgement of that strand and will also include detail
around strengths and areas for development/consideration as viewed by the reviewer. The
following format will be used by reviewers to summarise their findings.
Once the report is compiled and written by the lead reviewer, a draft will be forwarded to
the headteacher for checking. Any issues will be discussed, and the reviewer will make a
final decision regarding content.
A copy of the final report will be forwarded to the headteacher, the chair of the local
governing body, the Director of Quality & Standards and/or the Chief Executive Officer and
to the trust board via the Quality & Standards committee.
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The framework colleagues will use is below
Recording feedback
Best fit overall judgement based on evidence observed/provided:
Overall conclusions
•
Strengths
•
Areas for development/further consideration
•
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A typical review schedule
Leadership & management
English
Quality of Education
Maths
Personal development
Other subjects
Behaviour & welfare (incl
safeguarding)
Time • Introduction to SLT and position statement/SEF summary from Principal. • Time for team to finalise arrangements for the day.
• Introduce team to whole staff if appropriate.
Form Form time/assembly
Form time/assembly
Lesson 1 Meet Headteacher to discuss SEF & action plan
Meet SLT i/c curriculum
Meet SLT i/c personal development curriculum
Meet with B&W lead
Lesson 2 Meet Middle leaders & cross-section of staff
Meet subject leaders
Meet subjects lead/s: curriculum review and book scrutiny
Meet with safeguarding team & safeguarding governor separately
Break
Lesson 3 Meet English Lead: curriculum review & book scrutiny
Meet Maths Lead: curriculum review & book scrutiny
Subject learning walk
General learning walk
Lesson 4 English learning walk
Maths learning walk
Student voice activity PD
Student voice activity
Lunch Team lunch/observe lunch and student voice
Lesson 5 Provision for groups meeting Meet Chair of governors
Meet with Maths teachers & students separately
Meet with subject teachers & students separately
Case study follow up
Meetings/evidence Compile evidence, additional meetings, discussion.
Team feedback & discussion
Feedback to SLT
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Criteria to consider during learning walks
1a Teachers use subject expertise, knowledge and practical skills to provide learning opportunities
1b Teachers ensure there is an equality of opportunity for all learners to access every lesson, as building blocks to the wider curriculum
1c Strategies to support reading/vocabulary understanding/numeracy are in place for pupils who need it/cannot access the curriculum
1d The content of the lesson is suitably demanding
1e The lesson content is appropriate to the age group and does not lower expectations
1f There is a logical sequence to the lesson
1g Teachers provide opportunities to recall and practise previously learned skills and knowledge
1h Assessment provides relevant, clear and helpful information about the current skills and knowledge of learners
2 Teaching
2a Teachers demonstrate good communication skills
2b Teachers’ use of presentation allows pupils to build knowledge and make connections
2c Teachers use relevant and appropriate resources during presentation to clarify meaning to pupils
2d Teachers possess good questioning skills
2e Teachers give explicit, detailed and constructive feedback in class
2f Teachers effectively check for understanding
3 Behaviour
3a Teachers create supportive classrooms focused on learning
3b Teachers create focused classrooms through their high expectations for pupils
3c Teachers communicate clear and consistent expectations which are understood and followed
3d Pupils’ behaviour contributes to the focus on learning
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Criteria to consider when conducting book scrutiny
Building on previous learning
Depth and breadth of coverage
Pupils’ progress Practice
Pupils’ knowledge is consistently, coherently and logically sequenced so that it can develop incrementally over time. There is a progression from the simpler and/or more concrete concepts to the more complex and/or abstract ones. Pupils’ work shows that they have developed their knowledge and skills over time.
The content of the tasks and pupils’ work show that pupils learn a suitably broad range of topics within a subject. Tasks also allow pupils to deepen their knowledge of the subject by requiring thought on their part, understanding of subject-specific concepts and making connections to prior knowledge.
Pupils make strong progress from their starting points. They acquire knowledge and understanding appropriate to their starting points.
Pupils are regularly given opportunities to revisit and practice what they know to deepen and solidify their understanding in a discipline. They can recall information effectively, which shows that learning is durable. Any misconceptions are addressed and there is evidence to show that pupils have overcome these
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TCAT Curriculum Review Tool
This tool is to be used to support colleagues who are engaged in any activity focused upon
reviewing the effectiveness of the taught curriculum. It draws upon elements of the new
Ofsted framework and the focus upon the quality of education provided by an academy.
Curriculum review activity will aim to consider:
1. The clarity of vision around curriculum intent
2. How well the curriculum is planned and sequenced
3. How effectively teachers deliver and assess the curriculum to ensure pupils have
long term knowledge and understanding which they can apply appropriately
across the curriculum
4. Evidence in lessons, books, dialogue and from national data to indicate positive
impact
Important Ofsted definitions of curriculum terminology
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Curriculum ‘deep dive’ methodology employed by Ofsted and
TCAT reviews
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Our approach to the curriculum review process
Team member
Timings
Quality of
education English
Leadership &
Management Of curriculum
Quality of
Education Maths
Quality of
Education Science
Quality of
Education History
Time Meet with SLT
Lesson 1 Meet with
Subject lead to discuss
curriculum vision &
planning
Meet with SLT i/c curriculum
and T&L
Meet with
Subject lead to discuss
curriculum vision &
planning
Meet with
Subject lead to discuss
curriculum vision &
planning
Meet with
Subject lead to discuss
curriculum vision &
planning
Lesson 2
Learning walk of chosen
year group
Meet with Subject leads
to discuss curriculum
vision &
planning
Learning walk of chosen
year group
Learning walk of chosen
year group
Learning walk of chosen
year group
Break
Lesson 3 Book scrutiny
of selected students with
Subject lead
Learning walk
Book scrutiny
of selected students with
Subject lead
Book scrutiny
of selected students with
Subject lead
Book scrutiny
of selected students with
Subject lead
Lesson 4 Meet with teachers
observed in learning walk
with books
Work
sampling with subject leads
Meet with teachers
observed in learning walk
with books
Meet with teachers
observed in learning walk
with books
Meet with teachers
observed in learning walk
with books
Lunch
Meet with teachers observed in learning walk with work
Lesson 5 Meet with
selected students with
their books
Meet with
teachers observed in
learning walk with work
Meet with
selected students with
their books
Meet with
selected students with
their books
Meet with
selected students with
their books
Meetings SL catch up if
required
SL/SLT catch
up if required
SL catch up if
required
SL catch up if
required
SL catch up if
required
Team
Meeting
Team Meeting
Feedback Feedback to SLT
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Ofsted criteria for Quality of Education judgement Good (2) Intent
✓ Leaders adopt or construct a curriculum that is ambitious and designed to give all pupils, particularly disadvantaged pupils and including pupils with SEND, the knowledge and cultural capital they need to succeed in life. This is either the national curriculum or a curriculum of comparable breadth and ambition. [If this is not yet fully the case, it is clear from leaders’ actions that they are in the process of bringing this about.]
✓ The academy’s curriculum is coherently planned and sequenced towards
cumulatively sufficient knowledge and skills for future learning and employment. [If this is not yet fully the case, it is clear from leaders’ actions that they are in the process of bringing this about.]
✓ The curriculum is successfully adapted, designed or developed to be ambitious and
meet the needs of pupils with SEND, developing their knowledge, skills and abilities to apply what they know and can do with increasing fluency and independence. [If this is not yet fully the case, it is clear from leaders’ actions that they are in the process of bringing this about.]
✓ Pupils study the full curriculum; it is not narrowed. In primary academies, a
broad range of subjects (exemplified by the national curriculum) is taught in key stage 2 throughout each and all of Years 3 to 6. In secondary academies, the academy teaches a broad range of subjects (exemplified by the national curriculum) throughout Years 7 to 9. [If this is not yet fully the case, it is clear from leaders’ actions that they are in the process of bringing this about.] The academy’s aim is to have the EBacc at the heart of its curriculum, in line with the DfE’s ambition,78 and good progress has been made towards this ambition. This ambition applies to secondary academies only, and does not apply to university technical colleges, studio academies, alternate provision or special academies.
Implementation
✓ Teachers have good knowledge of the subject(s) and courses they teach. Leaders provide effective support for those teaching outside their main areas of expertise.
✓ Teachers present subject matter clearly, promoting appropriate discussion about the subject matter being taught. They check pupils’ understanding systematically, identify misconceptions accurately and provide clear, direct feedback. In so doing, they respond and adapt their teaching as necessary without unnecessarily elaborate or individualised approaches.
✓ Over the course of study, teaching is designed to help pupils to remember long term the content they have been taught and to integrate new knowledge into larger ideas.
✓ Teachers and leaders use assessment well, for example to help pupils embed and use knowledge fluently, or to check understanding and inform teaching. Leaders understand the limitations of assessment and do not use it in a way that creates unnecessary burdens on staff or pupils.
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✓ Teachers create an environment that focuses on pupils. The textbooks and other teaching materials that teachers select – in a way that does not create unnecessary workload for staff – reflect the academy’s ambitious intentions for the course of study.
These materials clearly support the intent of a coherently planned curriculum, sequenced towards cumulatively sufficient knowledge and skills for future learning and employment.
✓ The work given to pupils is demanding and matches the aims of the curriculum in being coherently planned and sequenced towards cumulatively sufficient knowledge.
✓ Reading is prioritised to allow pupils to access the full curriculum offer. ✓ A rigorous and sequential approach to the reading curriculum develops
pupils’ fluency, confidence and enjoyment in reading. At all stages, reading attainment is assessed and gaps are addressed quickly and effectively for all pupils. Reading books connect closely to the phonics knowledge pupils are taught when they are learning to read.
✓ The sharp focus on ensuring that younger children gain phonics knowledge and language comprehension necessary to read, and the skills to communicate, gives them the foundations for future learning.
✓ Teachers ensure that their own speaking, listening, writing and reading of English support pupils in developing their language and vocabulary well.
Impact
✓ Pupils develop detailed knowledge and skills across the curriculum and, as a result, achieve well. This is reflected in results from national tests and examinations that meet government expectations, or in the qualifications obtained.
✓ Pupils are ready for the next stage of education, employment or training. They have the knowledge and skills they need and, where relevant, they gain qualifications that allow them to go on to destinations that meet their interests and aspirations and the intention of their course of study. Pupils with SEND achieve the best possible outcomes.
✓ Pupils’ work across the curriculum is of good quality. ✓ Pupils read widely and often, with fluency and comprehension appropriate to
their age. They are able to apply mathematical
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Sources of evidence specific to curriculum intent: Guidance to Inspectors
Inspectors will draw evidence about leaders’ curriculum intent principally from discussion with senior and subject leaders. Inspectors will explore:
✓ whether leaders are following the national curriculum and basic curriculum or, in academies, a curriculum of similar breadth and ambition
✓ how carefully leaders have thought about what end points the curriculum is building towards, what pupils will be able to know and do at those end points, and how leaders have planned the curriculum accordingly. This includes considering how the intended curriculum will address social disadvantage by addressing gaps in pupils’ knowledge and skills
✓ how leaders have sequenced the curriculum to enable pupils to build their knowledge and skills towards the agreed end points
✓ how leaders have ensured that the subject curriculum contains content that has been
identified as most useful, and ensured that this content is taught in a logical progression, systematically and explicitly enough for all pupils to acquire the intended knowledge and skills
✓ how the curriculum has been designed and taught so that pupils read at an age-appropriate level.
Inspectors will bear in mind that developing and embedding an effective curriculum takes time, and that leaders may only be partway through the process of adopting or redeveloping a curriculum. If leaders have an accurate evaluative understanding of current curriculum practice in their academy and have identified appropriate next steps to improve curriculum quality and develop curriculum expertise across the academy, inspectors will evaluate ‘intent’ favourably when reaching the holistic quality of education judgement. They will recognise that the criteria for a judgement of good are the best fit.
Inspectors will also consider any documents that leaders normally use in their curriculum planning but will not request materials to be produced or provided in any specific format for inspection. Implementation In evaluating the implementation of the curriculum, inspectors will primarily evaluate how the curriculum is taught at subject and classroom level. Research and inspection evidence suggest that the most important factors in how, and how effectively, the curriculum is taught and assessed are that:
✓ Teachers have expert knowledge of the subjects that they teach. If they do not, they are supported to address gaps in their knowledge so that pupils are not disadvantaged by ineffective teaching.
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✓ Teachers enable pupils to understand key concepts, presenting information clearly and encourage appropriate discussion.
✓ Teachers check pupils’ understanding effectively and identify and correct misunderstandings.
✓ Teachers ensure that pupils embed key concepts in their long-term memory and apply them fluently.
✓ The subject curriculum is designed and delivered in a way that allows pupils to transfer key knowledge to long-term memory. It is sequenced so that new knowledge and skills build on what has been taught before and pupils can work towards clearly defined end points.
✓ Teachers use assessment to check pupils’ understanding in order to inform teaching, and to help pupils embed and use knowledge fluently and develop their understanding, and not simply memorise disconnected facts.
Impact When inspectors evaluate the impact of the education provided by the academy, their focus will primarily be on what pupils have learned. Inspection experience and research show that the most important factors to consider are that:
✓ A well-constructed, well-taught curriculum will lead to good results because those results will reflect what pupils have learned. There need be no conflict between teaching a broad, rich curriculum and achieving success in examinations and tests.
✓ Disadvantaged pupils and pupils with SEND acquire the knowledge and cultural capital they need to succeed in life.
✓ National assessments and examinations are useful indicators of pupils’ outcomes, but they only represent a sample of what pupils have learned. Inspectors will balance outcomes with their first-hand assessment of pupils’ work.
✓ All learning builds towards an end point. Learners are being prepared for their next stage of education, training or employment at each stage of their learning. Inspectors will consider whether pupils are ready for the next stage by the point they leave the academy or provision that they attend.
✓ Pupils in sixth form are ready for the next stage and are going on to appropriate, high-quality destinations. Inspectors will also consider this.
✓ If pupils are not able to read to an age-appropriate level and fluency, they will be incapable of accessing the rest of the curriculum, and they will rapidly fall behind their peers.
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Quality of education questions for subject/senior leaders
Curriculum intent questions:
Is there is a clear and coherent rationale for the curriculum design ?
Are the rationale and aims of the curriculum design are shared across the academy/department and fully understood by all?
Do Curriculum leaders show understanding of important concepts related to curriculum design, such as knowledge progression and sequencing of concepts?
Does curriculum coverage allow all pupils to access the content and make progress through the curriculum? How?
Is the curriculum is at least as ambitious as the standards set by the National Curriculum / external qualifications?
Do curriculum principles include the requirements of centrally prescribed aims?
Is reading prioritised to allow pupils to access the full curriculum offer?
Is mathematical fluency and confidence in numeracy regarded as preconditions of success across the national curriculum?
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Implementation indicators:
Do subject leaders at all levels have clear roles and responsibilities to carry out their role in curriculum design and delivery?
Do subject leaders have the knowledge, expertise and practical skill to design and implement a curriculum?
Do leaders at all levels, including governors, regularly review and quality assure the subject to ensure it is implemented sufficiently well?
Do leaders ensure ongoing professional development/training is available for staff to ensure curriculum requirements can be met?
Do leaders enable curriculum expertise to develop across the academy?
Do curriculum resources selected, including textbooks, serve the academy’s curricular intentions and the course of study and enable effective curriculum implementation?
Does the way the curriculum is planned meets pupils’ learning needs?
Is curriculum delivery equitable for all groups and appropriate?
Do leaders ensure interventions are appropriately delivered to enhance pupils’ capacity to access the full curriculum?
Does the curriculum have sufficient depth and coverage of knowledge in the subjects ?
Is there a model of curriculum progression for every subject?
Does curriculum mapping ensure sufficient coverage across the subject over time?
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Is assessment designed thoughtfully to shape future learning? Assessment is not excessive or onerous?
Are assessments reliable? Do teachers ensure systems to check reliability of assessments in subjects are fully understood by staff?
Is there a mismatch between the planned and the delivered curriculum?
Impact indicators:
Is the curriculum successfully implemented to ensure pupils’ progression in knowledge - pupils successfully ‘learn the curriculum’?
Does the curriculum provide parity for all groups of pupils? Do disadvantaged pupils and those with SEND achieve the best possible outcomes?
Is work across the curriculum of a good quality?
Do results from national tests and examinations suggest the implementation is effective?
Does evidence suggest pupils are ready for the next stage of education, employment or training?
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Education Connect & Staff Development
Education Connect, TCAT’s professional development offer. Twitter: @Edu_Connect_ Contact: [email protected] Education Connect is our professional development offer for all members of the trust and beyond. For the academic year this is a blended offer comprising of both online, virtual courses and those held at the TCAT Professional Development Centre. TCAT CPD offer for teaching staff High-quality, effective continuous professional development is at the centre of our vision for the trust. We value and invest in all of our staff to ensure we deliver on the very best outcomes for all our pupils. The type and quality of CPD that organisations use really matters when it comes to improving teaching quality and pupil outcomes. We use the latest recommendations and research such as EEF-funded projects, toolkits, The Teacher Development Trust and impact reports to support us in delivery and implementation. We recognise that effective CPD is:
• Supported by the school’s leadership • Sustained over at least two terms • Includes expert input, peer collaboration and opportunities for teachers to consider
and experiment with their learning and get feedback on their work. Our CPD offer comprises of internal training and external training, including accredited qualifications. ITT
• ITT programme delivered via Learning@TCAT teaching academy Early career stage
• NQT programme
• Accelerate programme (accredited Chartered College & Education Development Trust)
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Middle leadership
• In-house leadership development programme • Access to NPQML
Senior leadership
• Access to full suite of NPQSL, NPQH and NPQEL via Best Practice Network General
• Chartered college/National College training • TeachMeets • National Literacy Trust training • Governor training
Oxford University Partnership/Oxnet@TCAT
• Bespoke programme of CPD, research and residential opportunities to available to teachers from across the trust to support a diverse range of pedagogy, policy and practice
Subject specific
• Hub CPD • Science Learning Partnership offer including Science, DT & Computer Science hubs
Professional Networks
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Devolved leadership via a network of hubs
A broad range of hubs have been established to lead on specific educational/business strands across TCAT, linking into the main strategic objectives. Each hub is focused upon sharing good practice and expertise across the trust and, where appropriate, looking to harmonise practice where this will maximise impact. Each hub is led by a designated senior practitioner and all academies are required to send representation. Each hub has a clear remit and works to a set of objectives and an action plan. Hub groups meet half termly and leads provide half termly updates to members of the Central Executive Team. TCAT Communication and Reporting Strategy gives further information around the direct reporting models in place. The overall aim is to create strength through interdependent practice.
COVID-19 Response
• Cross-phase hubs
• Primary
• Secondary / Post 16
• Business
Central Executive Team for Strategy & Operations
(CETSO)
Operational Managemtn Team (OPCAT)
Business & operations
Estates managemnt
IT
Finance
Secondary Heads
Assessment
Curriculum
EBACC subject hubs
Music
Sports
Careers & Aspirations
Computer & Science
Central Executive Team (CET)
Teaching & Learning
Transition
SEND
Safeguarding
Personal Development
Behaviour & Welfare
Primary Heads
Curriculum, Assessemnt & Outcomes
EYFS
English
Maths
STEM
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EEF Guidance, catch-up response and remote learning offer During lockdown, academies across the trust quickly established online learning to ensure learning continued for pupils. Despite the high-quality resources and online learning, there is a recognition that the consequences of the pandemic are far-reaching for all pupils, particularly for those from socially disadvantaged families. Our strategic objectives for the year 2020-21 recognise the importance of tackling any disparities for pupils as well as further developing the remote learning offer the academies across the trust have in place to support partial or full lockdowns. This includes implementing effective curriculum delivery and continuity in the context of COVID-19 measures. We use and signpost colleagues towards proven research as conducted by the EEF and others. We recognise that evidence, ‘strongly suggests that compensating for the negative impact of school closures on the gap will require a sustained approach. School leaders will need to make difficult decisions about what to prioritise in the coming months, recognising the tremendous strain the pandemic has already placed on teachers and children.’ (Professor Becky Francis, EEF Covid-19 Support Guide for Schools). A number of support guides have been shared with academies to support their response to the pandemic. Links can be found here: EEF COVID-19 Support Guide for Schools https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/public/files/Publications/Covid-19_Resources/Covid-19_support_guide_for_schools.pdf This guide primarily focuses on supporting teachers and leaders across primary and secondary, although many strategies will be relevant for and support early years and post-16 colleagues also. Elements contained within it relate to high quality teaching, literacy and numeracy programmes and supporting transitions. Any approach chosen must follow the trust’s commitment to using the EEF implementation model in which academies continue to evaluate and monitor the impact of different approaches. EEF School Planning Guide 2020-21 https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/public/files/Publications/Covid-19_Resources/The_EEF_guide_to_supporting_school_planning_-_A_tiered_approach_to_2020-21.pdf This guide offers practical, evidence-based guidance to support school in planning a tiered model that focuses upon (1) high-quality teaching, (2) targeted academic support, and (3) wider strategies.
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Catch-Up funding This one-off catch-up premium for the 2020-21 academic year has been allocated by the government to ensure that schools have the support to help all pupils make up for lost teaching time, recognising the support required for disadvantaged and vulnerable groups. To support with identifying how to use the funding effectively, academies are guided to follow the EEF principles that encompass the evidence-based approaches that can be found within the EEF Covid-19 Support Guide for Schools. Remote Learning All academies are expected to plan a detailed remote offer that is as effective as possible. Academies should use learning from across the trust from lockdown, alongside guidance and packages to help them support all pupils, particularly those from disadvantaged backgrounds. The EEF has a suite of resources to support this including guidance, the national tutoring programme information, Early years support, Resources for schools and parents, Best evidence on impact of school closures on the attainment gap and Best evidence on supporting students to learn remotely. Covid-19 Resources https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/covid-19-resources/